Voters to decide school board seats

HARLEM VALLEY — Along with the budget and additional propositions, school district residents in both Webutuck and Pine Plains will also have the opportunity to elect new Board of Education members next Tuesday, May 21.

Two seats open,

two Webutuck candidates

In Webutuck, there isn’t much contention. Seats currently filled by Dale Culver and John Perotti are up for election. Culver and Perotti will be the only names on the ballot when voters head to the booths on Tuesday.

Perotti has been on the Board of Education for 29 years, and has served as president and vice-president.

“I pretty much run the gamut,� he said smiling. “I’m the local historian.�

Perotti said he’s got the experience and perspective needed for the position. He said he wants to continue working towards finalizing district consolidation, as the donation of the Amenia Elementary School building to the town of Amenia will be a separate proposition on the ballot for voters to consider.

“We also need to continue to raise standards,� he said, “and challenge the students to obtain higher goals. And I also think we can continue to be innovative in handling the finances of the district. We always need to be aware of the burden on tax payers.�

Culver, who is the current board president, is serving his second term on the Board of Education. He was a bit harsher on his past performance.

“We need to redouble efforts to improve chances for less fortunate kids,� he said, citing issues brought to his attention with the way the school has been handling special education and Section 504 students. “I’m very disappointed at the board level this year as well as with my own performance in being able to help those kids. We say far too much and take far too long to do it.�

However, Culver stressed that despite some shortcomings, the board has produced “the best budget it can produce,� and that he has “a great interest in trying to further the academic progress of children in the community.�

Proposed reconfiguration

creates opposition among

Pine Plains candidates

It’s much more of a battle for three vacant seats in Pine Plains; residents will have the option of six candidates this Tuesday. Seats currently held by current president Helene McQuade, vice-president Bruce Kimball and Mary Zayas are up for election. McQuade and Kimball are running again, while Zayas is not.

Of the remaining four candidates, only Paul Brant is a newcomer to the Pine Plains Board of Education (and public office as well). The rest, John Shea, Henry Boehringer and Thomas Garrick, have all sat on the board in some capacity in the past.

Because of the number of candidates this year, the Lions Club in Pine Plains decided to hold an informal forum for residents to acquaint themselves with the candidates and ask questions about their platforms. All six attended the forum, which was held Monday evening.

McQuade has been on the board since 2002, and has served the last three years as president.

“I still have the same commitment to the community and children’s education,� she said. “I’m proud of the progress I’ve seen in the district over the last five years.�

McQuade held up several charts she had brought with her over the course of the meeting, mostly illustrating the high level of education the district was producing compared to the surrounding area, versus the low administration costs to run the district and tax burden on district residents (again, compared to other school districts in and around Dutchess County).

Shea has served two terms on the Board of Education. He said he decided not to run after the last term, because personal obligations would have prevented him from giving the board 100 percent of his time and dedication.

“I want to see school programs stay without raising taxes,� he said. “There’s nothing in the town for our children without them.�

Kimball has been on the board for the last six years, and taught math at the middle school and high school for 33 years. During his time on the board, he acknowledged it faced many challenges, including minimal increases in state aid. However despite obstacles, the board has produced sound budgets; he pointed out that Pine Plains has the second lowest budget in the county, and is 59 out of 62 when compared to the entire Hudson Valley.

Kimball admitted that he has made mistakes during his time served on the board, and one was putting last year’s budget up for voter consideration after it was defeated, instead of going right to contingency. He also said that, even if it cost him the election, he would tell the truth.

“The truth is we could significantly cut the budget [further],� he said, explaining that teaching positions could be eliminated, as well as courses and cuts to the sports programs. Cold Spring Elementary could even be closed.

“But I’m opposed to every one of those,� he said, saying they would do damage to the schools and the nine towns the Pine Plains school district is comprised of.

Boehringer has spent one three-year term on the board, and said he resigned for personal reasons as well as “some degree of frustration.�

“I feel the leadership of the board is out of touch with the district,� he said. He cited the public voting down last year’s budget as an example. Boehringer said that the board has to be proactive in terms of future financial planning, something he doesn’t believe is currently happening. He added that he while he is not in favor of closing Cold Spring Elementary, he would like to look at other alternatives to the K-2, 3-5 reconfiguration plan the board has decided upon.

“I would  look at realignment only in the face of closing Cold Spring, otherwise I’m not for it,â€� Boehringer stressed.

Paul Brant explained that the discussion (and public displeasure) over the board’s realignment plan prompted him to run for office.

“I was upset by it,� he said, “and I felt like I didn’t have a voice. We were told we were listened to, but the response from the board didn’t fit that.�

Brant said he felt the people needed a more direct voice in the “monumental decisions� the Board of Education was making. He suggested that something as big as reconfiguration be put to a district-wide vote.

“We need to inject common sense into an otherwise political system,� he said. “Many ideas I have are radical departures from the board’s current line of thinking.�

Finally, Garrick has served 11 1/2 years on the board, in six-year stretches in the 1970s and 1990s.

“This board doesn’t have a clue as far as I’m concerned,� he said about his motivation for running again. “They’re working for the superintendent, instead of the superintendent working for them.�

He said he was concerned by the rising costs of administration, as district population decreases. He explained his goal was to cut 10 percent off of the $25 million budget. Garrick has also been director of facilities for the district, and said he knows these buildings “inside and out.�

Discussion was moderated by Peter Hage, president of the Lions Club, and public comments and questions motivated much of the discussion, which at several points became extremely heated. About 20 residents attended the forum, far less than was expected.

See the article on the Board of Education budgets for more information on where and when to vote on Tuesday, May 21.

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